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6 / OPTICS LETTERS
273
= 7.7
Birefringence in single-mode optical fibers is known to result (1) from deviations of the core geometry from the ideal straight circular cylinder and (2) from mechanical stress through the elasto-optic effect. Thus various kinds of birefringence have recently been explained, occurring in fibers with elliptical core,1 in fibers
weak curvature, Kr <<1, where 2r is the outer diameter of the fiber. The layer dx in Fig. 1 (b) is bent at a radius
(1)
under lateral and in twisted In all cases, first-order electromagnetic perturbation theory and the well-known first-order elastic stress fields give satisfactory solutions. For bending-induced birefringence
d b 3
pressure,2
fibers.3
ble. Several attempts to explain /b gave results too small by orders of magnitude.4 In this Letter, we point out that bending-induced birefringence is essentially a stress effect. It results from the lateral, compressive stress -aox that builds up in a bent fiber under the conditions of "large" deformations. The well-known dominant stress component 5 in a bent fiber (Fig. 1) is o- = KEx, where K = 1hR is the plane, u, is a tensile stress in outer (x > 0) layers, but r- is compressive in all inner (x < 0) layers. Conse-
Comparing this relation with the fundamental equations of elasticity,5 we recognize that -K 2 Ex plays the role of a compressive volume force density. For a
simple estimate of the resulting birefringence, we ignore
all other stress components (oY= 0) and integrate Eq. (2) along the x axis with ux (&r) = 0 at the fiber surfaces,
OX = K2 (E/2)(X 2 (X)
material.
r2 ).
(3)
curvature and E is Young's modulus. Across the xy quently, the outer layers exert a pressure -aox in the radial (R) direction on the inner layers. This pressure
is highest on the fiber axis and causes the birefringence,
(a)
The dominant stress a, does not contribute directly to the birefringence: No stress effect proportional to K can exist because o- is an odd function of x, whereas the electromagnetic wave functions of the two orthogonal linearly polarized HE11 modes are even functions. Therefore, all first-order perturbation integrals 3 vanish.
x
Moreover, no geometry effect proportional to K exists, because in that order of approximation the core deformation has a fourfold symmetry. It is not surprising, therefore, that a second-order
dependence,
fb
-K
2,
oretical analysis would require second-order electromagnetic perturbation theory as well as the evaluation of the elastic stress up to terms -K 2 . Of the large number of terms in such an analysis, our present study
concerns only one. As we find it in good agreement with
I (b) I i
I I I i
12r
(C) x
our measurements, we believe all other terms to be much smaller. For a calculation of the lateral stress in the cross
section z = 0, we postulate the fiber as elastically ho-
Fig. 1.
274
index n, the birefringencebecomes fib kx-ky t k (On, - 5ny), where k, and ky are the propagation constants
of the HE11 mode polarized along the x and y axes, respectively, and k = 27/Xvac. The elasto-optic index changes bnx and 5ny are evaluated from the stress oa (0) components of strain. fib
=
line representing Eq. (5). The birefringence reported in Ref. 4 seems to disagree with Eq. (5), but actually the
/Im,
at the fiber axis by6 6n, = - W/2) 1Pije The Pij denote the strain-optical coefficients, and the ej are the
Using Poisson's ratio v, we have
- P12)(1 + V)K2 r 2
Cx- Cy= (oa - oy)(I + v)/E, and we arrive at 0.25kn 3(pl (4)
The rigorous integration of Eq. (2) given in the Ap-
is taken into account. The negative sign in Eq. (5) indicates that the fast axis of the bending birefringence coincides with the radius of curvature. The slow axis is normal to the plane of curvature. These directions agree with our observations. In order to illustrate the absolute magnitude of the
bending-induced birefringence, we consider as an example a fiber of 2r = 100-Arm diameter coiled on a drum of 2R = 4-cm diameter. With K = 0.5 cm-, we find that
fb =
pendix happens to give exactly the same result. Equation (4) predicts correctly the observed4 variation
fib
K 2.
the square of the outer fiber diameter 2r. Our measurements on three fibers of different diameters confirm
various manufacturers. To exclude any other stress effects in the measurements, the fibers were laid out in one or more circular turns on a flat surface and held down only with high-viscosity oil. He-Ne laser light was coupled into one fiber end at 450 azimuth relative to the plane, and the state of polarization at the output end was analyzed with a Soleil-Babinet compensator and Glan-Thompson analyzer. Inserting into Eq. (4) the published7 material constants of fused silica [n = 1.46; v = 0.17; (P11 - P12) =
-0.15], and with X = 0.633 sum, we obtain
bending-induced birefringence becomes comparable to the intrinsic birefringence of typical present-day single-mode fibers. In conclusion, we have explained the bending-induced birefringence as a second-order stress effect and have calculated and measured its magnitude. The result is useful in the design of fiber-optical interferometers. Appendix In the limit Kr << we may calculate the lateral stress 1, distribution as a perturbation v(') (x) + o.(2) (xy) superimposed upon the dominant stress a, (0)= KEx. In order to determine this perturbation from Eq. (2), we ignore the curved geometry and integrate Eq. (2) in Cartesian coordinates x ,y,z. From ordinary first-order
elastic theory, 5 we find that Eq. (3) describes exactly the
distribution ax(1)in a (bent) slab of thickness 2r that extends infinitely along the y and z directions and is subject to the constraints Ey = E, = 0. By symmetry, v). This field o-(1) serves as the particular integral5 of the inhomogeneous Eq. (2). This first perturbation v(') acts on each element of the fiber surface x 2 + y 2 = r2 with an elastic force an (1)
-
0
as
V
0
w CD
~~~~~00
whose Cartesian components are combined in complex form5 F(a) = x(1) + iay(1). Here a is the azimuth.
z m 0 w
-z
IL
-fib/0
* 2r=66jpm
0
CD mco z3
-
- 2r=92jim
.0 2r=98Jim
allows the fiber surface to relax into a state in which there is no normal surface stress. The stress field o(2) (xy) resulting from that relaxation is calculated by assuming a force -F (a) to act on the surface of an originally unstressed fiber. The total lateral stress in the bent fiber is the sum a(') + 0-(2). Actually, we re1 the fiber axis. We obtain boa + 6(2) = -K 2r 2 E/2 and, therefore, exactly Eq. (4), if we calculate ba(2 ) by Mus-
y (0) on
co in I
3 .1lo-
4v
,e
10 3
Kr
.
I ,,,
= i Jf F (a) da and
3.J10-3
f(a)
Fig. 2. Bending birefringence of single-mode silica fibers. The solid line represents the calculated birefringence (Eq. (5)].
v (1 - v)- 1
(6) (7)
The points are measurements at 0.633 and 0.676 Am using three fibers of different origins.
(E/2)v (1 - v)- .
(8)
275
4. A. M. Smith, presented at the Optical Communication Conference, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, September
1979, paper 10.2.
5. N. I. Muskhelishvili, "Einige Grundaufgaben zur mathematischen Elastizitatstheorie" (Carl Hanser Verlag, Munich, 1971).
8. A. M. Smith, Central Electricity Research Laboratories, Leatherhead, Surrey KT22 7SE, England, personal communication.